Guest Blog – Under Milk Wood: A Play for Ears

By |2020-10-13T16:57:51+01:00October 13th, 2020|Guest Blog|

Under Milk Wood: A Play for Ears Some reflections on T. Rowland Hughes, Philip Burton and Dylan Thomas David N. Thomas     First published in New Welsh Review, May 2020 Wherever I’ve lived, in town or country, I’ve always enjoyed standing at my front window watching my local world go by, and often it’s proved [...]

Two Dwellings on the Road to Llareggub. Guest blog by David N. Thomas

By |2020-04-08T12:16:49+01:00June 9th, 2018|Guest Blog|

First Dwelling: From Lady Cholmondeley to Jack the Donkeyman It was several months before I heard from Dai Cwc again. He chided me for ending my last blog in such a tantalising way. Who was this ‘distinguished son’ of Wales? Where exactly was his country home? And what did he or it have to do [...]

“I’m Just a Voice on Wheels”: Did the expectations to be the ‘great poet’ lead to the early death of Dylan Thomas?

By |2020-04-08T12:16:51+01:00June 12th, 2017|Uncategorized|

In a follow up to my blog - Like Eggs Laid By Tigers: How Dylan Thomas's Language Filled Early Years Shaped his Poetry - below is a biography of Dylan's later life from 1939 until his death in November 1953. Dylan Thomas’s life – 1939-1953 By 1939, Dylan had become a father for the first time and [...]

Minstrel Mermaid of a Town: Dylan Thomas and the Festival Of Britain

By |2020-04-08T12:16:51+01:00May 15th, 2017|Guest Blog|

This blog was originally written for Historic England. International Dylan Thomas Day is celebrated on May 14th, commemorating the life and work of the Welsh poet. To mark this, Andrew Dally of dylanthomasnews.com introduces us to Dylan Thomas’s link to the Festival of Britain. In the spring of 1951, at the height of his broadcasting [...]